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| Conducting Effective Business Meetings |
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By Doug Staneart
How would you describe meetings you have
attended in the past? Last Tuesday, I was
facilitating a workshop on how to facilitate
more successful meetings, and to start things
off, I asked the group that very question.
The answers that they provided were very
similar to answers that I have received from
hundreds of workshop participants over the
last ten years.
The first two responses were…
"Meetings are looooooooooong," and
"Meetings are BOW-ring (this workshop was actually held in my hometown
of Fort Worth, Texas - thus the Texas twang.)"
Those two responses almost always
come up
when I ask the question. Others
that also
come up a lot are: Wastes of
time, non-productive,
confrontational, inefficient,
repetitive,
and a number of other negative
descriptions.
Every once in a while, I get
a response like
positive, informative, or necessary,
but
usually the other participants
gang-up against
the person very quickly.
Most people believe that business
meetings
are necessary evils, and in many
cases, they
are. But one of the most important
things
we can remember about business
meetings is
to NOT have one unless it is
absolutely necessary.
When your employees and coworkers
are in
staff meetings, they are not
producing. Nothing
is ever produced until after
the meeting
is over. Some one of my first
pieces of advice
to people who want to make meetings
more
effective is to have fewer of
them.
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About five years ago, I made
this statement
in a class, and a young lady
in the front
row raised her hand and said,
"That
sounds really good, but my whole
job description
involves going to meetings."
I was intrigued,
so I asked her to tell me more.
She was a
personal assistant to a manager
of a Fortune
500 company, and she was hired
by her boss
to attend the meetings that he
could not
attend himself because there
were not enough
hours in the day. After class,
she and I
sat down and identified 32-hours
of wasted
meeting time that she was participating
in
every week. These were meetings
that neither
she nor her boss was actually
needed for,
but that one of them attended
every week.
Over the next year, this one
person increased
productivity of her team by over
200%. Granted,
this is an extreme case, but
there are probably
hours in each of our weeks that
are wasted
by ineffective meetings.
The tips below are strategies
that I have
collected over the years from
class members
who swear by their effectiveness.
I hope
they work for you as well.
- Have an Agenda: Outline ahead of time what points will be
covered in the meeting. Write it out, and
distribute it to participants ahead of time.
This will help avoid the "chasing of
rabbits," and help participants be more
prepared for the meeting.
- Follow the Agenda: This sounds very elementary, but you'd be
surprised by the number of people who take
the time to create an agenda, and then totally
disregard the agenda during the meeting.
- Limit the Agenda to Three Points or Less: Ask yourself, "What are the three most
important things we need to cover in the
meeting?" Limit the agenda to these
three points. The rest of the things you
wanted to cover, by definition, weren't really
that important anyway, so why waste everyone's
time?
- Set a Time Limit: I would suggest setting the time limit for
the meeting to be no longer than 30-minutes.
In future meetings, shorten the time by five
minutes until the time limit is 15-minutes
or less. The leader of the meeting will become
much more efficient, and the participants
will become much more focused as well. When
the time limit is up, end the meeting. You
may not get to cover every single thing that
you wanted to the first couple of times you
try this, but within a short time, you will
find that the major information points are
being discussed and decisions are being made
very efficiently.
- Encourage Participation from Everyone, but
don't Force Them: Instead of going around the table and asking
for opinions or input, just ask a question
and let people volunteer their answers. There
will be times during any meeting that each
person will "phase out" (especially
if it is a looooong and BOW-ring meeting.)
If we call on every person, it wastes time,
and puts people on the spot. Other ways of
encouraging participation is to just ask
a question, and after someone answers, say
something like, "Good, let's hear from
someone else." If there are people in
your meeting who rarely speak, instead of
calling on them directly, you might say something
like, "I value the opinion of each of
you, does anyone else have something to add."
Then, just look at the person you want to
hear from. If he or she has something to
say, he or she will say it if encouraged
in this way. If he or she doesn't, then you
haven't embarrassed the person.
Meetings can be a very powerful way to communicate
and solve problems. In past workshops that
I have facilitated, we have shown leaders
how to identify the root-cause of a problem,
come up with dozens of possible solutions,
come to a consensus as group on the best
possible solution, and create a written plan
of action that is measurable in 15-minutes
or less. Your meetings can be that efficient
and that powerful too if you use these simple
tips.
Doug Staneart, doug@leaderinstitute.com, is CEO of The Leaders Institute, Management and Public
Speaking Training. His classes focus on overcoming the fear
of public speaking, building confident and
autonomous leaders, and improving employee
morale. He can be reached toll-free at 1-800-872-7830.
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